Monthly Archives: September 2010

Wine review — Battle of Bosworth, Gilberts, Best’s and Xanadu

Battle of Bosworth McLaren Vale Preservative-Free Shiraz 2010 $18–20
Was it wine or grape juice we wondered as the dense, purple liquid splashed into the glass? Heady enough, after a few sips, to be wine, for sure, and a plush, pure, fruity one at that. A leg in each world we decided ¬– too fruity to be like real red but too alcoholic to be juice; perhaps something to quaff with lunch. It’s good news, too, for people sensitive or allergic to sulphur dioxide – the preservative used in wine since Roman times. Without it wines, succumb very quickly, often losing their vitality within months.  This one’s as vibrant as they come, though almost certainly it needs to be consumed early.

Gilberts Mount Barker Riesling 2009 $16–$18
Best’s Great Western Riesling 2010 $20–$22

Meet two contrasting rieslings from either side of the continent – one from Mount Barker, a little north of Albany in southern Western Australia, the other from Great Western, in south-western Victoria. While technically dry, with less than half a gram per litre of residual sugar, Gilberts tastes slightly sweet because it’s so deliciously fruity. Bev Gilbert says this makes it a winner at cellar door. It’s a style that goes particularly well with spicy food. Best’s, a year younger and just 11.5 per cent alcohol, presents riesling’s more steely-dry face. It’s a wonderful aperitif and just right to cut through slightly oily food like fish.

Xanadu Margaret River Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $35
Best’s Great Western Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $25

Following the east-west theme, here’s a couple of exciting cabernets from Margaret River, Western Australia, and Great Western, Victoria. Xanadu shows the class and elegance we’ve come to expect from wines in the Rathbone family group (Yering Station, Mount Langi Ghiran and Parker Coonawarra Estate). It’s classic Margaret River with its complex, high-toned, cigar-box aroma and flavours, built from ripe fruit and beautifully integrated oak, and firm but elegant structure. Great Western shows a chunkier side of cabernet, with ripe blackcurrant varietal flavour and dense, chewy, very firm tannins.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Beer review — Lobethal Bierhaus and Weihenstephaner

Lobethal Bierhaus Red Truck Porter 330ml $4.42
This English style dark ale comes from Lobethal in the Adelaide Hills, just a short drive east of Adelaide. The aroma suggests roasted grain, coffee and chocolate – flavours delivered generously on the palate. A subtle hops flavour adds freshness and a mild bitterness that offsets the generous malt flavours

Weihenstephaner Kristall Weissbier 500ml $5.85
This beautiful Bavarian wheat beer comes from the Weihenstephen brewery, dating to 1040. It’s their filtered version and therefore crystal clear. It pours with a luxurious white head and has the style’s classic, delicate banana-like aroma. The palate’s light and lively, combining subtle, smooth malt with wheat beer’s zesty, fresh finish.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wynns Coonawarra — snapshots of the great terra rossa

To the outsider motoring along the Riddoch Highway, Coonawarra looks flat and homogenous – twenty or so kilometres of vines stretching away east and west of the highway.

The highway, bisecting the vines north-south, sits almost imperceptibly above the ground level of the vineyards. But the slight elevation means good drainage, probably explaining why nineteenth century pioneers chose this route across southernmost South Australia.

Wynns, the heir to the region’s original winery, opened by John Riddoch in 1896, holds vineyards the entire length of the famous terra rossa soils, spreading out on either side of the highway.

The vineyards overseen by Wynn’s viticultural chief, Allen Jenkins, comprise holdings amalgamated over many decades: Penfolds joined Wynns in the eighties, then along came Hungerford Hill, Rosemount and, later, the other large landowner in the district, Mildara. It’s all now part of Treasury Wine Estates, the wine arm of Foster’s.

The vines continue to feed into group brands, including the $175-a-bottle Penfolds Bin 707 cabernet sauvignon. But Wynns flies the regional flag. And following major restructuring and replanting of the vineyards over the last decade, now produces a growing suite of individual vineyard wines. The wines reveal different faces of the great terra rossa, within a consistent regional mould.

These new reds join the old favourites: shiraz, first made under the Wynns name in 1952; cabernet sauvignon, made since 1954; cabernet shiraz merlot, originally a blend of leftovers, but now a more deliberate red; John Riddoch cabernet sauvignon, a luxury wine, first made in 1982, now only in the better vintages and highly sought after by wealthy Chinese; and Michael shiraz, a one-off sensation from the 1955 vintage, resurrected in 1990, and now produced in good years.

The new single vineyard wines, representing a collaboration between winemaker Sue Hodder and viticulturist Allen Jenkins, are: Harold Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon 2001; Johnson’s Block Shiraz Cabernet 2003 and 2004; Messenger Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 and Alex 88 Cabernet Sauvignon 2006.

These have all come and gone. But they’re joined in this year’s release by three wines from blocks spread along V and A Lane, an east-west road traditionally viewed as the divide between northern and southern Coonawarra. Tradition had it that shiraz wouldn’t ripen south of this landmark. (Coonawarra subsequently spread several kilometres south, initially to the northern outskirts of Penola. Then, under the sadly oversized official “geographic indication” declared a few years back, the boundary stretched south of Penola to embrace a couple of isolated vineyards. Wynns sources only from “traditional” Coonawarra.)

V and A Lane began forty years before John Riddoch introduced grape vines to the regions. Surveyed in 1851, it ran from just below Robe on the coast to the Victorian border, marking the boundary between the South Australian electorates of Albert and Victoria.

The surveyor, Eugene Belairs, erected substantial markers every mile. And declares a Wynns brochure, “local legend has it that Chinese immigrants used these landmarks to show the way on their route from Robe across to the Victorian goldfields in 1857”. Those adventurous pedestrians probably created the road later named V and A Lane by the Penola District Council.

Land in the vicinity of V and A Lane formed part of John Riddoch’s Yallum Estate but was carved up after his death. Today, Wynns 160-hectare vineyard bordering the lane comprises the Woods, Glengyle, Childs, Albert and V and A blocks. The blocks are planted mainly to cabernet sauvignon and shiraz planted from 1966. Replanting of some unproductive blocks continues.

The wines released from these blocks this year provide interesting contrasts to the Wynns regular releases. This is part and parcel of a groundswell among Australian winemakers to capture shades and nuances of flavours arriving from various parts of their vineyards.

Wynns Coonawarra Estate Shiraz 2009 ($10–$22) versus Wynns Coonawarra Estate V and A Lane Shiraz 2008 ($35–$43)
Wynns standard shiraz delivers the round, juicy flavours of the vintage with very little apparent impact from its short time maturing in oak. The more expensive V and A Lane, despite coming from the hot 2008 vintage is much more restrained – it’s leaner and tighter, with spicy oak flavours and tannins adding to its great strength and elegance – a wine needing time for tightly wound, very sweet berry fruit flavours to emerge.

Wynns Coonawarra Black Label Estate Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 $19–$34 versus Wynns Coonawarra Estate Glengoyle Cabernet Sauvignon 2007 $35–$43
Again we see contrasting vintages, but a vineyard-based style difference, nevertheless. Black Label seems bigger and more solid than in recent vintages. It’s densely coloured, intensely varietal, with a touch of Coonawarra mint, and firmly structured. The Glengoyle wine is more medium bodied with distinct “black olive” character seen in good cabernet. The palate’s very finely structured, lovely oak flavours and tannins harmonising with the fruit. It’s a strong but elegant wine with years of cellaring in it. Indeed, both wines should cellar very well.

Wynns Coonawarra Estate V and A Lane Cabernet Shiraz 2008 $42.99
There’s no wine in the standard Wynns line up to compare with this one. It’s a traditional and wonderful Coonawarra blend, though not seen all that often these days. The firm, taut structure seems mostly cabernet designed; and the delicious, slightly plumper, spicy palate is surely attributable to the shiraz. Like the other two special releases, it has lots in reserve for the cellar.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

When honesty is a foreign concept

Dear Foster’s and Lion Nathan, why do I find it so hard to find “brewed in Australia” on the labels of international brands you brew in Australia?

I have in front of me bottles of Stella Artois and Beck’s that you brew in Melbourne and Sydney respectively.

I’m reading Stella’s front label and see “Belgian Tradition”, “Belgium’s Original Beer” and “Anno 1366”. On Beck’s I read “Brauerei Beck & Co Bremen, Germany”. No mention of Australia. But I’m looking.

So, over to the back label. Oh, there it is, smaller print, but clear enough. But how many people might never look there? How many people see Belgium and Germany prominently on the front labels and believer that’s what they’re buying? Why wouldn’t they — these are reputable international brands.

I’ve no quibble with the beers. They’re excellent facsimiles of the originals, brewed with extraordinary care and attention.

But aren’t the front labels misleading? Don’t drinkers deserve the truth? Why not put “product of Australia” prominently on the front labels.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wine review — Clonakilla, Best’s, Jones Road, Kerrigan + Berry, Cardinham Estate

Clonakilla Canberra District Shiraz Viognier 2009 $85–$100
Murrumbateman, New South Wale
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Today we review two of the best arguments for growing shiraz around Canberra – two sensational Clonakilla reds from the outstanding 2009 vintage. The flagship, made from shiraz and viognier grown on Clonakilla’s original vines and the adjacent T and L vineyard, shows the brooding but silky, plush magic of shiraz co-fermented with viognier. It’s denser and more concentrated than the O’Riada, with a fine, more tannic bite. Our bottle revealed new levels of flavour every day, for five days – suggesting a long cellar life. Recommended drinking from 2015.

Clonakilla Canberra District O’Riada Shiraz 2009 $45
Murrumbateman, NSW, and Hall, ACT

Winemaker Tim Kirk sources fruit for O’Riada (a shiraz-viognier blend) from four vineyards: Phil Williams’ at Hall, and Long Rail Gully, Ravensworth and Quarry Hill at Murrumbateman. The blend also contains estate-grown material from barrels that don’t make the cut for the flagship blend. O’Riada’s slightly leaner than the flagship and the tannins are less apparent. It shows a pleasing hint of stalkiness from the use of whole bunches in the ferment. But this is just seasoning in an aromatic, juicy, silk-smooth, medium-bodied wine of great complexity.  Though lovely now, it’s another long-term keeper.

Best’s Bin 1 Great Western Shiraz 2009 $25
Grampians, Victoria
Moving south to Great Western Victoria, we find another distinctive expression of cool-climate shiraz. We shift from Canberra’s berry, spice and savouriness to something plumper, with distinct black-pepper notes – nicely melded with vanillin oak flavours. Low yields in this warm, dry vintage also account for the unusually rich, rich, sweet fruit flavours. The wine was made by Adam Wadewitz using fruit from Best’s and other vineyards in the Great Western district. It’s ready to drink and should evolve well for about ten years.

Jones Road Pinot Gris 2009 $25
Mornington Peninsula, Victoria

Rob Frewer reports a big, healthy canopy on his pinot gris vines in 2009 limited the sunburn that affected many other vines in the district. Even so, the wine weighs a hefty 14 per cent alcohol, although there’s sufficient fruit flavour and texture to keep this in the background. The flavours are full, ripe and spicy and there’s a rich texture derived partly from time in old oak and partly from the natural grape tannins. It finishes slightly sweet but fresh and with a farewell tannic bite.

Kerrigan + Berry Riesling 2010 $28
Mount Barker, Great Southern, Western Australia

Michael Kerrigan and Gavin Berry made this from the cool, south-facing Langton Vineyard at Mount Barker, in Western Australia’s Great Southern region. The cool site shows in the lemony varietal aroma and tight acid structure of the wine; and the vine age (1970s) will be partly responsible for the great depth and length of fruit flavour. This is a delightful, unevolved wine that works well now as a bracing aperitif and should evolve over time, taking on honey and toasty flavours and developing a richer texture.

Cardinham Estate Shiraz 2008 $20
Clare Valley, South Australia

The Cardinham vineyard, founded by Fred Dinham in1981, carries on today, considerably expanded, with a new, 500-tonne capacity winery and in the hands of Dinham’s grandchildren – Shane Smith as boss, and Scott Smith making the wine, with help from Brett Stevens. Cardinham offer tremendous value as seen in this pure, appealing shiraz. It’s bright and vibrant – the varietal flavour at the ripe, black cherry end of the spectrum, with well-judged oak adding palate weight and complexity.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wine review — Helm, Clonakilla and Shaw & Smith

Helm Canberra District Half Dry Riesling 2010 $20
Here’s the full bottle on Ken Helm’s half-dry riesling – it ain’t ‘alf bad. Inspired by a time-proven German winemaking trick, Helm knocked the yeasts on their heads before they’d gobbled up all the natural grape sugar – arresting the wine at a moderate 10.5 per cent alcohol, and leaving a subtle, sweet kiss of residual sugar. It’s a delicious combination in riesling – tonnes of bright, zesty fruit flavour, in this instance with a distinctly apple-like aftertaste; a little burst of fruity sweetness on the mid palate; and high natural acidity tying it all together and giving a sharp, fresh, dry tang to the finish.

Clonakilla Canberra District

  • Viognier Nouveau 2010 $25
  • Viognier 2009 $45

With these wines Clonakilla’s Tim Kirk presents two faces of the Rhone Valley’s distinctive white variety, viognier. It tends to make juicy, plump, viscous wines dripping with apricot-like flavours and tending to fatten quickly with age. Kirk’s Nouveau, cool-fermented in stainless steel tanks, presents pure, fresh-from-the vine, vibrant fruit flavour, with a tangy acidity and the first signs grip and texture peeping through. The second wine, barrel fermented and from the warm 2009 vintage, presents viognier’s more refined face, albeit with buckets of ‘apricot’ varietal flavour woven with barrel-derived characters, and a thick, velvety texture.

Shaw and Smith Adelaide Hills Shiraz 2008 $38
Martin and Shaw and Michael Hill-Smith’s red sets the pace for Adelaide Hills shiraz – the altitude, and therefore cooler climate, setting its style apart even from those of the neighbouring Eden Valley, to the north. It’s typically fine boned and elegant and based on lively, ripe-berry flavours – more akin to what we make in Canberra than the burly styles made just down the hill from it. But in the hot 2008 vintage its style lurches towards the bigger end of the spectrum. The bright berry flavours are still there, but it’s fuller bodied with more assertive tannins.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wine reviews — McWilliams, Helm, Clonakilla, Mount Avoca and Cofield

McWilliams Mount Pleasant Elizabeth Semillon 2006 $14–$22
Hunter Valley, New South Wale
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Surprisingly for such a northerly, warm region, the lower Hunter produces delicate, low-alcohol semillon of great flavour, individuality and longevity. If the idiosyncratic style is to your taste (tart and lemony when young; toasty and honeyed with great age), then top-notch Hunter semillon, like Elizabeth, can be the inexpensive corner stone of a cellar. At four years, the just-released Elizabeth (10.5 per cent alcohol) is lemony and bone-dry, with distinctive lemongrass-like varietal flavour and the first signs of toasty bottle age. It has years of cellaring ahead of it, too.

Helm Canberra District Premium Riesling 2010 $45
Murrumbateman, New South Wales

Ken Helm’s Premium Riesling won a silver medal in this year’s Winewise Awards. But I’d be surprised if it doesn’t win gold in future. Typically, it begins life pretty tart and austere, but over time the fruity intensity and palate weight build. It’s on the lean side anyway, as it’s just 11 per cent alcohol – and tastes just ripe, with a lemony, herbal edge and bone-dry finish, with varietal flavours beginning to push through. The fruit comes from Helm’s Murrumbateman neighbour, Al Lustenberger.

Clonakilla Canberra District Riesling $25–$30
Murrumbateman, New South Wales
Clonakilla’s thirty-fifth riesling provides quite a contrast to Helm’s. It’s riper (12.5 per cent alcohol versus 11 per cent), pushing the aroma more to the floral end of the riesling spectrum and filling the palate with more upfront fruit flavour. However, the palate’s still delicate and restrained – deliciously varietal and fine textured, with a vibrant, brisk acidity. Winemaker Tim Kirk says he’s entering it in the regional show in September, his first entry in over ten years. We’re backing it for a decent medal.

Mount Avoca Reserve Shiraz 2007 $59
Pyrenees, Victoria

What’s an ugly cork like you doing in a beautiful wine like this? The ProCork – a natural cork with a wrinkled, protective plastic membrane on each end – has the aesthetic appeal of a burst blister. And in our sample bottle the wine had already travelled up the cork beyond the protective membrane. So what’s the point of it? The wine, though, is exciting. It’s a blend of the first crop from new ‘Bests’ clone shiraz vines with material from the vineyards original old vineyard. It’s taut, elegant and savoury with a delicious core of sweet, varietal fruit. Our bottle drank beautifully for five days after opening, suggesting a long cellar life should the cork hold. Only 130 cases produced.

Cofield Max’s Footstep Moscato 2010 $13
Rutherglen, Victoria

The promiscuous muscat grape has its genes in clones of just about every other variety, injecting its grapey, musky flavour wherever it shows up. Here it flaunts its naked, sweet grapiness unadorned. Damien Cofield used the same muscat a-petit-grain rouge that goes into Rutherglen’s famed fortified muscats. But here it’s pink, light (six per cent alcohol), musky and flagrantly, fragrantly fruity, with zesty, fresh effervescence – a frivolous wine for life’s fruity moments.

Clonakilla Shiraz 2009 $24–$30
Hilltops, New South Wales

Tim Kirk’s shiraz viognier did more than any other wine to build Canberra’s reputation. But the larger-volume, lower-priced Clonakilla Hilltops shiraz brings home the Kirk family’s bacon. The 2009’s sourced from three vineyards near Young and shows Tim’s magic touch. Its pure, ripe-berry, spice and musk aroma gets the juices flowing. The palate delivers similar pure varietal flavour and its woven with gentle, fine tannins. I rate this the best yet of this wine and recommend it for drinking now or cellaring for up to a decade.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Wynns unleashes Coonawarra’s diversity

A few weeks back this column looked at the massive decline in value of Foster’s wine assets over the past decade. Despite the carnage, however, the business maintains a pulse. And within the newly named Treasury Wine Estates some of the key Australian brands remain intact from a grape-growing and winemaking perspective – albeit savaged by commercial blunders and the global financial crisis.

Despite serious write-downs, Treasury remains a large operation, “with over 12,000 hectares of vineyards, sales totalling 35 million cases of wine annually and revenue of over $2 billion” and employing over 4,000 people in 12 countries.

Its brands include Beringer, Chateau St Jean, Etude and Stags Leap in the United States; Matua Valley in New Zealand; Castello di Gabbiano in Italy; and, in Australia, Lindemans, Wolf Blass, Penfolds, Rosemount Estate, Wynns Coonawarra Estate, Seppelt, Coldstream Hills, Devil’s Lair, Annie’s Lane, Black Opal, Heemskerk, Ingoldby, Jamiesons Run, Killawarra, Leo Buring, Mildara, Pepperjack, Rothbury Estate, Robertson’s Well, Metala, Saltram, Seaview, St Huberts, T’Gallant, Little Penguin, Tollana and Yellowglen.

If once-great brands like Lindemans and Rosemount seem almost invisible, others retain clear style identities – based on surprisingly resilient winemaking cultures, backed by distinctive grape sourcing. Almost miraculously, it seems, great old brands, for example Penfolds, Wynns, Wolf Blass and Seppelt escaped the corporate blending vat. Thankfully, the quest for back-office synergies didn’t (or hasn’t yet) devastated these individual cultures as it did their sales and marketing arms.

The resilience demonstrates how top makers build their reputations on the types of wine they make. And a wine’s style always gets back to regions, grape varieties and human interaction with them – usually over great spans of time. This is the international vocabulary of fine wine.

Success never has been, never will be driven by glib marketing or brand management of the fast-moving-consumer-goods mould. With wine, the brand starts with the product and the rest – packaging, logos, advertising, promotional activities – all grow from it.

No one markets wine as well as the winemaker. Australia’s boutique industry demonstrates this consistently. And even in a declining Foster’s wine arm, the makers drove the marketing – taking their message to wine drinkers through the media and wine events.

In recent months, for example, we’ve seen Penfolds chief winemaker, Peter Gago, on his annual road show presenting the new vintages. He preceded the Wynns’ double act of winemaker Sue Hodder and viticulturist Allen Jenkins. And in the last week or two we’ve seen the Wolf Blass team out and about, led by chief winemaker Chris Hatcher.

We hope to visit the Barossa winemaking headquarters soon to piece together the bits behind all of Treasury Estate’s key brands. But in the meantime, let’s consider the extraordinary contribution Sue Hodder and Allen Jenkins made to Wynns Coonawarra wines over the last decade. They’ve effectively restructured the region’s biggest vineyard holding, spread over Coonawarra’s entire north-south, east-west spread.

Sue and Allen knew that while Coonawarra might look flat and homogenous, its subtle variations produce wines of surprising diversity. Ripening time varies by a couple of weeks from north to south – and even vary markedly within a single row of the same vineyard. Different clones of a variety produce different results, as do different soils. And a single soil type produces different grapes according to the season.

They studied vine behaviour and grape characteristics, following this through to the finished wine. Allen’s team rejuvenated old vineyards. Some, for example, after being “minimally pruned” for decades had thickly thatched crowns. Often these were lopped off completely and the vine trained up to new trellising.

Their work began early in the decade and progressed steadily under Southcorp ownership, Southcorp-Rosemount ownership and, ultimately, under Fosters. The focus was always to make better wine by producing better grapes.

Then in 2004 Sue conducted a tasting of all the Wynns cabernets back to the original of 1954, having done the same with the shiraz a few years earlier. While the tastings confirmed the great longevity and elegance of the Wynns style, they also gave Sue and Allen and their team’s great insights into the changing styles over the decades and ways to meld the best of the old days with modern practice.

As work progressed in the vineyards, Sue modified some winemaking practices and made the best of the segmented batches coming to the winery.

Despite the quality lift there remained a gap between what the vineyards could deliver and the ability of the winery to capitalise on it. That gap was closed in 2008 with the commissioning of a new small-batch cellar at the western end of the winery.

It’s a self-contained unit with twenty-four ten-tonne, temperature controlled, open fermenters and separate crushing and pressing equipment – designed to process small batches of more-evenly ripened fruit.

The old winery had been geared to process fairly large batches of grapes. And its few smaller fermenters couldn’t meet demand.

Even though the winemakers and grape growers knew that different sections of a vineyard ripened at different times, there simply weren’t enough small fermenters to partition the crop to the level that they wanted.

The arrival of the new winery meant that from 2008 grapes from a larger block, producing, say, forty to sixty tonnes, might be processed in five or six batches instead of two or three. In other words, grapes could be picked at perfect ripeness.

The impact that this has on quality lies partly in the batch size and partly in better fruit quality. Sue Hodder says small, small, open fermenters, being more aerobic, give winemakers better control over “reduction” (smelly hydrogen sulphide tends to develop in a closed, or reductive, environment). And harvesting small batches at perfect ripeness, rather than large batches with a range of ripeness, gives “brighter fruit with more evenly ripe, supple tannins’, says Sue.

Processing in multiple, small batches gives the winemakers more components and greater variation than they had in the past. And though it means more work it brings home all the work done in the vineyards over the last decade and already affects the quality and diversity of Wynns wines.

So, when a Wynns release comes around now, we’re treated not just to the long-established styles – like grey-label shiraz and black-label cabernet sauvignon – but a changing feast of wines from individual vineyards.

Each of these is made in small batches and has its own tailored oak-maturation. This year, for example, the release includes two reds from the V&A Lane vineyards – a shiraz and a cabernet shiraz blend and cabernet sauvignon from the Glengyle vineyard.

There’s a story behind each of these beautiful wines. And we’ll look at them next week.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Beer review — Nogne and Mikkeller

Nogne Wit 500ml $14.90
In Nogne Wit – a Norwegian take on the Belgian wheat ale style – brewers turn the volume up while keeping the beer balanced and drinkable. The aroma’s delicate, pure and fruity and the palate full and smooth, with crisp, lemony acidity, complex spicy notes and a slightly more bitter finish than in the Belgian originals.

Mikkeller American Dream 330ml $11.90
Mikkeller, a small Danish brewery, churns out dozens of idiosyncratic, attention grabbing brews – like this turbo hopped, bottle-conditioned lager. But the beer’s mighty malt opulence can’t match its ballistic bitterness beyond a sip or two, as the bitterness builds, leaving a sour aftertaste. It’s an interesting curio, but who’d drink it?

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010

Liquorice beer — how sweet it is

If you drop into Edgars at Ainslie or All Bar Nun, O’Connor, you might sip an extraordinary one-off, draft brew from Chuck Hahn and Tony Jones of Sydney’s Malt Shovel Brewery.

The latest in their occasional “Mad Brewers” series is “Noir Stout” – a black, seven-per-cent alcohol, imperial-style, seasoned with liquorice.

Hahn and Jones write, “the powdered liquorice root added at the boil along with super alpha hops, rounds out the middle palate and provides that mysterious finish”.

Of course, their intimacy with the beer means they can see what characteristics the various components add. And in this instance, there’s lots going into the vat: chocolate and crystal barley malt, roasted black wheat malt, Australian super pride hops and New Zealand super alpha hops – as well as the powdered liquorice.

An outsider looking in might taste the rich, roasted-malt flavours and detect a crisp acidity, courtesy of the wheat malt. And the palate’s certainly luxuriously textured and deliciously sweet – before the hops dry out the finish, adding a subtle bitterness.

The sweetness and body, apparently come from the liquorice, which also reveals itself in a pleasant, albeit faint, fennel-like aftertaste. Noir Stout was released on 23 August and is available only on tap.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2010